u u i,, --.lira-ii ir .tvxi-i. d..' w-.. .a.-..!.., wn.t-tjrf a -,-. . -, ,,,, I,,, i ii . ,i , mnm inm , , L L . , , Itl m mm ,. . . . the Somerset Herald 'enns of Publication. Published every Wednesday moraine; at CO ,r annum. If paid I "1" i otnerwu. - rtU invariably be ebrgd. nr. -twcriotion will be elscoeUnued nui an ',, . 4 on. Postmaster- negncung ii notify wb.n -ubscr-her. do not tak. out KTlpOon. J Subscribers re-nortag from one ottomce to aa llhr should srlve us the nam of the former a Lell u tb present eraoe. Address The Somerset Herald, Somerset. Pa. eep. sotner Somerset, Pa. nrn v TnrECKER, ' ATTOESET-AWjjW. Office, up-stalr. In Cook Beerlta" Block, G E011GER. SCLL ft ATTuni' ii " Somerfet Fa. TOIIN" R. SCOTT, .1 ATTUKNLY-AT LAW humcrss Fa. 1H J. KOOSER. ATTOKNEY-AT LAW, Somerset, Fa. In? ENDS LEY. ATTtiRXEY-ATLAW, Somerset, P s. U. TRENT. ATTOKNEY.AT-LAW, Somerset, Fens a. Euli SCULL. ATTOF.NEY-ATLAW, Somerset, Fa. II, L. P.AER, A TTOK N EY-AT-LA W, Somerset, Pa., will nrartlce In Somerset and sioin'.na- counties. All -uYlne. entrusted to him wiu ueprumpu, attended to. AH.COFFBOTH. , W. H. Ktlftu nOFFROTTI RUPPEL (J ATTUKNEYS-AT LAW. All business entrusted to their cart wiU be .tiilv and punctually attended to. W,rs m Main Cross street, oppoelta th. Mammoth block. i a j.oolbok;:. L. C. COLBORX. InOLBORlRORN, a n m.ir,e Intruded to onr care will be twnmpt- Irfc .ItblTanendcd to. Collection maae in m. ivitl Hord. and a.i.olnin IV-ontlea. Survey, hit; Coveyanelng done on reaaonable terms. TV riLLIAM II. KOONTZ. A TTOK ti-A i " , Somerset, Fa., win Kit. i..PL".,LJ,.n.:in' e,i to hlf care in Mmtni - tMhre in Frintlni? House Row. D' EXXIS MEYERS, ATTOKNEY-AT-Lw. Someroeu Penn a. All lecal hnrineM entrnnted to h If care will be iltrmle-1 to with promptness and fidelity. urn- on Main Cross Street, next door to Sny dVr a t 'o."s store. aprt JAMES L. PWH, ATTORNEY-AT-LAW, Somerset. Pa. Office. Mammoth Block, up slatrs. Entrance, Main Cmss street. Collections made, estates settled, titles examine.!, and all leiral business attended to with promptness and fidelity. Y. KIMMEL, ATTORN EY-AT-LAW, mays Somerset, Fa. Mj rniTTs. . ATTORNEY -AT LAW, Off.oe, up-stairs In Sltmmoth Block. JOHN 0. KIMMEL, ATTORN EY-AT-LAW, SomerMl, rm. f in BllcDa in u I'ufiucw mw ... m a. ( wttmmtmA A hi MK DM aVDa BUV1IIJ. V'Uioc II ENRY F. SC1IELE, ATTORNEY-AT l8.w, Huint. .nl Pension A it cut. Somerset, Fa. Office in Mammotn Black. VALENTINE HAY. V ATTORNEY-AT-LAW Ill attend to all business entrusted to bis car wun promptness ana noety . TOHX II. UIIE. fl ATTORNEY-AT-LAW 17 Somerset, Pa WiU promptly attend to all bnslness entrusted trr iu Mammu'lb Hull J in. T G.OGLE. s . ATTORNET-AT LAW, Somerset Pa Prlelonal bnslness entrusted to my care at tended to wun prompmew puu ibtouj. DR. J. M. LOUT HER, ( Formerly of Stoyestown.) PHVSICIAS 1SD SVRCKOS, , i . - i .m.nMttv In Sftmoritet for the nracilce ot ills irotcsion. Office S doors West of t entral Hotel, in rear ol Drue; Store. m?n r. E. W. P LOUGH, HOMEOPATHIC FHYS1CAS ASD SVRGEOK T.nH.m M iwrrlces to the ieoile of Somerset and vicinity. Calls in lown or country primptly att. nded to. I an I found at office flay or niarni, unless prolessionallv eniraei. arf-Otflce on S.iul beast corn.r ol Diamond, over Knepjier i Sh. Store. aprt3::i. D- R. II. S. KIMMEL"" tenders his professional service to the ettt ... nf s,nrnvi and VIclnitT. I nless nrofe.siin- al enaaiced he ran be found at his office, on Main St , east of the Dtamotra. D R. H. BRURAKER tfndors hi? trset and vicinltv. office in reaidenot on mala ortklesslonal aemces to me riiixrni m ureet west ol the Diamond. TVR. WM. RAUCH tenders his 1 professional services to the citlscns of Som- eret and TlclnltT. titflce One djor east of Wayne k Berkeblle's turniture store. Iiee.S, "Si. DR. JOHN RILLS, DENTIST. Omes p sulri in Cook A BeeriU Block .Somer set, Pa, DR. WILLIAM COLLINS. DENTIST. SOMERSET, PA. ifflce In Mammoth Block, above Boyd a Drug M..re. where he ewn at all times be loona prepar ed lu.lu .1! kimts of work, such as filltnir. reiru- katiea, extraetioc. ac. Artificial teetb of all kinds, sad of the best material Inserted. Operations warranted. H HOWARD WYNNE, MD. JOIIXSTOWX, PEXXJ. I'lseasesoftbeF.ye. Ear. Nose and Throat. Sjiedal and Exclusive practice. Hours, C a. u. to r. a. Luther fe Green Itlork, a Main St. J.1' THOMSON. M. D. SURGEON DENTIST. Johnstown. Pa. Has bad a professional experience ol more than thirty years. Fitt-ind Terra a Srmitv. otlf-e rooms No. SB? Main street (up stairs) over John 1 ln' Haniware Store. It will be neces sary for persona who want work done to make en araiceinBts be lure ha aa. octlS'SS. TAMES 0. KIERNAN, M. D. ten- I ders his professional services to the citlxens nf Somerset and vicinity. He can be lownd at the residence ol hlslatberoa Mala Siraet or at the oAce of Dr. Henry Brubaker. Sept DR. J. K. MILLER has perma nently locatarl In Berlin for the practice st his prvteafW. IrBtoe oppoatte Charles Krisslng er's saora. apr. Zi, TS-tt QIAMOND HOTEL, STOYSTOWN. l'ENN'A. This popular and well known house baa lately been thoruoshly and newlT refitted with all new wnd best ol Inrniture. which has made It a very t estraf.lt tJoipln( place ft the trauellns; public. His table and rooms cannot be surpassed, all be ns: first class, with a laree pubUe hall attached to the aame. Also lance sad roomy stablinc. First class board ins; oaa be bad at the lowest pos sible prices, by the week, day or meal. SAJITELCTTSTER, Prop. S.E-Cor. Diamond Stoyatow ,Pa ADMINISTRATOR'S NOTICE. Estate of Michael Klucer., dee'd. late oT Addison Twwublp. Somerset liounty. Pa. letters of Admlnlstratioa ao the above estat harina; beea s ran led to the andersiimed by the proper aatbortty. notica Is hereby aien to all persons lodebb-d ta said estsls to snae Immedi ate paymeat, and those bavins; claims ajralnjl the same will praeent them Oalv authentioatea for auiement oa Satorilay. An'irast Z, UM, at the lata rasidenca of the deceased. SAM VELA. RINGER. unels. AdmlnUtraVOT. V 1 tie VOL. XXXIII. NO G. Ri(seT7ay Patent Refrigerator The Best. It solves the difficult problem of Perfect Refrigeration. It driea and purities itself while in as by an Automatic Circulation of Air. It dispenses necessary 10 Keep it Clean, anl permiisoi a wihhi iimns; requiring really neeieaninsrui an u toos: as ioe supply is maintained. Milk, Hutter, Meats, Fish, Fruit, etc., can be kept in tbia Refrigerator at aame t'lme without imparting I hp flavor of either to the others. It ta much more economical In consumption of ire than any other Kefriirerator. Insulated with dead air ipaeaa made In beat manner, wun pa pet wans. morisK in purcuaeuig. aatisiactlon guaranteed, or money reiuaoru. Send for Illustrated Caul ogue. Fruit Jars, Jelly Glasses, Fruit Cans, Cement Ladles, Jar Fillers, Cherry Seeders, Granite Ware, Lamps, Clcthes Wringers, Fly Traps, Erlives and Forks, Castors, Etc. I F. W. HAY, Manufacturer and Dealer in ; PLAIN, STAMPED A JAPANNEU ! TINWARE. KANQES, STOVES, AND House Furnishing Goods, i Copper & Sheet Iron Ware. 1 Crashes tc. ' AT WHOLESALE and RETAIL. ' No. S78, 2W and 382 Washington St, JOHNSTOWN. PA. Wholesale Agent for Self Melting and Self-Sealing "Wax Strings For scaling Fruit Cam and Jan. The Simplest, t'besiiest, and mon reliable method for Stealing Fruit Jar ever used. From fro to so eta. per down saved br using them. Deal en supplied at mvnutactnrer't prlcea. Send for circular. FARMERS, FARMERS. WE HAVE MARKED DOWN Every Pair Of WHOLE STOCI KIP AND SPLIT PLOW SHOES. We Found Our Stock Was TOO LARGE, And in Order to Reduce Before The Them We Have Ccncludd to JIAEE THEH I0WN So Cheap that they are Eoncd to Go ITcw. ALL OTHER BOOTS SHOES, JJSlT SLIPPERS Call and See Ua, and Save Money bv Buying From L. OlSTE-FKICE SHOE STORE No. 212 Main St., Johnstown, Pa. SOMERSET COUNTY BANK 1 (ESTABLISHED 1877.) CHAELES. I. EtESlSOH. President M. I. PRITTS. Cashier Col lections made Statea. in all parts of the I'nlted CIIAEGES MODERATE. Partlea wlshtns; to send money West eaa be ae eotnmodatad by dra t New York la aay swm. Cullesajoas made wttfe promptoeaa. J. S. Boads bot-awa'and sold. Money and valuables secured by one of Die hold's celebrated ssUea, with a Sar gent a Tale aaot oe Ume kick. ACCOUNTS SOLICITED. WAUleira boUdayi observed. -fca STABBABDTEB S with metal llnina:.w objectionable beeaaaa of labor S2.00 Will purchaie a Kitchen Outfit, Oonslitlng 'of the fol lowing 38 ptecea : 1 blah Pan. 1 Cflffea Pot, 1 Water Bucket, 1 Covered Bucket, 1 Large Grater, a TinCupa, 4 Pie Platca, 1 Cake Cutter, 1 Saaee Pan, 1 Waiih Kuln, Table Knlvea, Table Forks, 6 Table Spoons, Tea Siiooot. EnaiM anl GalvauM In Water Coolers, LEMON SqVEEZERS. ICEPICKS, ICE T( N r, s. W I N E X OL EKS. T V M BLEU UKAINF.KS. ICECREAM MOLDS LlUOK MIXERS, ETC Albert a. Kobhk. J. Scott Wash. HOME & MRD arrcassou to EATON & BROS, NO. 27 FIFTH AVENUE, PITTSBURGH, PA. KPRl5?G1882. NEW GOODS EVEEY AY SPECIALTIES Imbroideries, Laces, MiHinery, Whlta Goods, Hind kerchiefs, Drew Trimmings, Hosiery, Gloves, Corsets, Muslta and Kerlns Uaderwear, In fants' and Children's Clothing. Fancy Goods, Yarns, Zephyrs, Mate rials of Ail Kinds for FANCY WORK, Gent's Fuim&i Goofis, k, k vera PATsoKAoa ia axsracTFtrLLT oucTrD. .SO-Onk-rs bv Mail attendol to with Prompt- ne$ and Dispatch. A NEW ENTERPRISE. E. M. Lambert & Bra, Manufacturers of and Dealers in White Pine ii Hemloct Slito We have secured a US) E W HVTTTiXj, I And manuiaeture Shingles on the Nlcblaran ! Priociiila. We cut. and constanllv keeD ou band ', two sriadesof the various kinds ol Shingles. We uaraulee our SbiiiKles to be superior to any in the County. Shall be pleased to have parties come and Inspect onr shingles before buying elsawbere. Address E, M. LAMBERT & BRO., LAMBERTSVILLE, SOMERSET CO., Pa, juucll tin. FASHIONABLE CUTTER & TAILOR, Havins; had many years experience in all branches of he Tallorlna bus- Iness. 1 truarantee bausiacuon to au who may call ap- on me and favor me with their pat ronage. Vours, Ac, WUI. M. IIOCHSTE IliEB, Somerset, Ptv marS QUEMAHONING WOOLEN MILLS. WM. S. MOliGAX, Proprietor, THE Avcnls of these well-known Mills are now visiting their customers with a splendid as sortment of WOOLEN GOODS, which Ihev wish to trade for WooL These Ootds are made In our own County, from Pure Stoei, on the Latest improved Machinery, and bj first class w.irkmen. We want FIFTY THWSASD POI SDS OF WOOL this year, and will make it par vou to deal with ns. aHsT-We sre also prepared to do Custom Spin nlnx and Wool Carding jfifr aprt3-im. Uuemahonlng, Pa. $66s week at home. $5 outfit tree. absolutely sure. No risk. Cap Btit reoutred. P.eader. if Voa ant business at which Demons of ertberaex, younsc or old, can snaseirre pay h the time they work, wun absolute eertainty write hr particulars ta H. Haixktt, Portland,Me. AGENTS wanted fir the of all the Presidents of the U. S. The lar gest, handsomest, best book ever sold for less sner twice onr price. The fastest selling book. Attest ca immense pronia to asjenu. aiu iuiusiim cople want It. Any one can become a snceesort aicent Terms free. Haixjott Rook Co., Port and, Maine. Lime, Lime. Lime I a From the Celebrated Peek Limestone Led sre famished aboard the ears at ear kilns near Pino Urove at cents per bushel, rnslaeked. Orders promptly oiled, tor lurtner particulars cauoa the nndcrsia-ned. J. M. auLt uicDtsuui at statu.. K or a-wood. Pa or m-syl ISAAC O. JUXES. Somerset, Pa CHARLES HOFFMAN. HEBCiAUT TAILOR. (Adots Henry He8teiy Stera) LITEST STYLES CJ LOWEST PEICES. OSA TISF ACTION GUARANTEED. SOMERSET, :P. ar a -- oiier To-Day. Don't tell rue of to-morrow ; Give me the boy who'll gar. That, when a good deed's to be done, " Let's do the deed toJay." We may all command the present, ' If we act and neyer wait ; But repentance is the phantom Of a past that comes too late. Don't tell me of to-morrow ; There is much to do to-day That can never be accomplished If we throw the hours away. Every moment has its duty ; Who the future can foretell ? Then why put off till to-morrow What to-Uay can do as well ? Don't tell me of to-morrow ; If we look upon the pa.t. How much we have left to do We cannot do at last. To-day 1 it is the only time For all on this frail earth ; It takes an age to form a life, A moment gives it birth. AH, THE PITY OK IT!" BY TIG II B HOPKINS. Many years ago I made a slay, extending over a period of months, in a email, obscure watering place on the southeast coast I had just finished my course as a student at Guy 8 Hospital, and, under the com bined strain of severe and not over- pleasant work in the wards and dis eectine room, and ot a sharp and exhausting examination, my health had given way. I was ordered to take rest, and with it any mild form of recreation that pleased me best, and beins at that time much strait ened in pocket, and having no in clination to tax the hospitality of mends, 1 went down alone to the little seaside town of Southbeach. I took small rooms in an unambitious street from which, when the tide was unusually high, I obtained an uninterrupted view of about a half dozen miles of sea. It was the mid die oi beptemoer, and the season was waning. The place was crowd ed and the visitors, of both sexes and all ages, thronged the beach from morn till dewy eve." Al though without friends, acquaint ance or companions, I was not in the least degree lonely. I entered thoroughly into the life of the place and took a liVelv interest in the sports of the children on the sands ; in the flirtations, jealousies, little quarrelings and peace-makings ef the young people ot seventeen, twen ty and twenty-two ; in the confabs of the aunts, mammas and grand mammas, and in the discomforts and trials, more or less stoically borne, of the papas. As the month closed in, the holiday population be gan rapidly to thin. The morning train to town was crowded each day and the loiterers on the beach dwin dled like the sheep of Wadsworth's northern shepherd. The brass band performed its last tune on the ter race, and dissolved amid a crash of big drum and cymbals; the negro minstrels washed their laces and re sumed conventional habiliments ; the itinerant preacher disappeared on the same morning that the don keys were driven off the cliff ; the perambulators, which had obstruct ed the beach for fourteen weeks, were hoisted ou the luggage train. and the bathing machines were drawn far out of the wash of the waves. Bv-and-by the sands wore the desolate look which the banks of the Red Sea might have worn after the morning of the annihilation of Pbaroah and his host : and on such days as were bright enough and warm enough lor an early dip I bad the whole wide sea to myself; those who like the seaside only as it ap pears in mid July or August, when the season s brief fever is at its I heieht. will connect a sense of the dismal with this description, Put let me hasten to eav that for my part found nothing dismal or depressing in the emptiness of the town, or the barrenness of the shore. The little place quickly settled down to the life which it led during eight months of the yeir, and this in its turn had a eentle charm lor me. 1 had a leel ine of importance as I walked through the High street, the sole remaining visitor, and on the beach of an evening I had full liberty to regard myself as a ne Alexander Selkirk and te indulge imaginings as I looked across the never ending sea, taat i was monarcn oi au i surveyed." The barber began to take a personal interest in me ; the policeman would halt on hia un eventful beat to inquire kindly after the effect of the new tonic I was trying ; the tobacconist and station er, an ardent amateur sportsman, took pains to cultivate in me an af fection for the turf, and the young ady at the postoffice was never in a hurry to retire behind the screen after she had served me with a shill ing's worth of postage stamps. I had another set ol mends along the beach where the fishermen told me yarns which, ignoring the. 44 too too solid " evidence of their apocryphal character, I accepted as unimpeach able gospel ; the post-guards unbent so far as to touch their caps, and the piermaoter more than once invited me into his snuggery at the end of the pier, where he kept a bcttle or two of double extra proof spirits, of the existence of which the corst guards above mentioned were dis creetly ignorant I had more friends now, in short, than I had when the town was packed and the beach swarmed with visitors ; moreover, being of solitary habit I took pleas ure in day-long rambles in the coun try which stretched away almost from the water's edge, and amid fields still verdant and hedges yet teeming with life and color, I re newed the botanical pastimes of boy hood. A striking (indeed the most strik ing) feature of Southbeach was its pier. It was an old, sturdy, wooden structure, only a few yards short of a mile in length, which had resist ed wind and wave for nearly a hun dred years. Rugged of aspect, its height, length and massy build in vested it with a character almost of grandeur ; and it gave one an idea of strength well-nigh invincible to note the steadfastness) of the piles when the waves rushed against them, and the storm winds Btnote set ESTA.B3LI8HED, 1827. SOMERSET, PA., WEDNESDAY. JULY 23, 1884. them with a giant's blows. In all weathers and at all times I found the pier a delightful promenade. It was restful and quieting beyond ex pression to sit there on a still after noon What time the splendor of the setting inn Lay beautiful upon the waters. At early morn ing the air was coolest there, and the sea showed a hundred colors under the radiant sky. By nightthe place had a mystic beauty of its own tv hen the moon clave a white way across the gleaming waters, and the pale phosphorescence tracked the swift, silent motions of the fish. On a breezy or stormy day the pier head, a mile away from the shore, was a coign of vantage around which the winds eddied briskly or thun dered magnificently, the foam top ped waves seething and roar ing among the timbers under neath. A day rarely passed on which I did not visit the pier ; often I re mained there irom morning until afternoon, or trcm afternoon till far into th night calling to mind, as far as I was able, all that my favor ite poets, lrom viigu to laureate, had Denned about the sea, and com paring the descriptions with the living, moving waters ; turniagthen to the sky, and longing for the pen cil of a Turner or the quill of Rousseau to put upon the canvas or into words the colors, the texture and movements of the "unenduring clouds." In a little while it seemed as though the pier belonged to me. stayed on it for hours, hanging over the wooden ran unui x couiu i most touch the waters with my hands, or wandering the length of it, 44 lonely as a cloud," and never meeting but one living creature, This was th man who occupied a tiny hut on the pier head, whose function was to light at dusk the huge lamp which tlung a red glare over the waters. He was an ill favored man, short and lean, with a hooked uose and crooked eyes, who reminded me of a waxen murderer I had seen in the Chamber of Horrors at Madame Tussaud's In the not very robust state of health in which I was at the tine the eight of this always aitected me uncom fortably. and when I saw him com ing I ran down the steps of the land ing stage in the centre of the pier, and kept my gaze fastened on the sea. One afternoon, toward the end of Oct6ber, when for three weeks 1 had held almost undisputed possession of the pier, I was surprised nay startled, to see approaching from the shore the figure of woman." - The height shape and genera lines of the form told me that she wan a woman, and nresentlv tha gait, the poise of the head, the car riage of the figure told me that she was a lady. There was excuse for my fueling of surprise, but I do not know that 1 ought to have been startled. Startled, however, I was that much I remember distinctly and in that state of mind I remain ed while the lady, with slow, even and graceful steps, drew near to me. As she approached I could see that she was followed, at a distance ef two or three paces, by a female at tendant She came nearer, and J saw her disuactiy. She was tai and slight, and of singularly elegant figure. Drawn half over her lace was a thin J ace veil, which intensi fied the pallor of her complexion She was dressed in black from head to foot and wore a rich silk mantle, very slightly edged with sable, which, fitting to perfection, lent ad ditional grace to her figure. She was beautiful, with a beauty thai had never seen before. Pale almost to whiteness, with clustering black hair, and eyes large, deep and lus trous, and of the blackest black. As she came to where I was sitting I stood up to let her pass, and she went on without noticing me. The expression on her face struck me as singularly sweet and tender, but the eyes were the striking feature, and the ray of strange, half sad light that passed from them haunted me when she had gone. The maid fol lowed a woman of rather heavy countenance, and strong but obsti nate shoulders, who looked straight before her, and seemed to have no eyes save for her mistress enly. I watched them as they passed, and went slowly down the pier. The mistress never looked behind or spoke to the maid, and the maid al ways walked at the same distance of two or thre paces from the mistress. I waited, hoping that they would return ; but they stayed long and I, who had been fasting since earlv morning, at length went home. I was on the pier next morning and again in the alternopn, and looked curiously for the unknown visitant of the previous day, but she did not appear. Meantime my thoughts were busy and I asked myself again and again who was she, and what had brought her to bouthbeachr Hers was a figure that would have been noticea ble anywhere, I should have singled her out I thought from the crowd that frequented the beach a few weeks past and was therefore, of course, especially noticeable on the narrow pathway of the deserted pier. It did not occur to me that she was invalided like' myself ; in deed, there was nothing of the in valid in her appearance ; but why, then, had she come to Southbeach, a place recommended solely by the salubrious vigor of its atmosphere which, in every other respect, seem ed unworthy of her? Three days passed, and I saw her again, l bis Ume she was before me on the pier, and as I entered it from the shore I saw her coming in the distance. Saw her, I say, and yet it was with the eye of the mind rather than with the eye of the body for she was half a mile distant; but I knew her in an instant As she came near I had an intense desire to hear her voice, but knew that I should not dare to speak to her. A happy accident however, favored me. The little kitten belonging to the solitary lady at the end of the pier had followed her towards the shore. She had, perhaps, spoken to it, or fondled it, as it gambolled where I had often seen it on the light-keeper a threshold ; at any rate it had attached itself to her, and she was at a loss what te do with it as we met and were passing one another, she stopped and said : 44 You are going to the end of the pier l lhis little kitten has follow ed me. I cannot let it leave its home, Will you think me rude if I ask you to take it with you ?" What could I say ? I said that of course I would take it with pleas ure, and in my heart of hearts blessed the kitten lor having fol lowed the lady witi the lustrous eyes. I took it in my arms it was a little friend of mine ; I had played with it a hundred times and the lady thanked me with her eyes 1 a . ana, oowing slightly, passed on. She came the next day, a little later than before, her attendant with her, and I plucked up courage to ad dress her. I was about 22 years old at that time, and I gathered from her looks and manner that the lady was some three or four years my senior, so that, in every way, I felt myself her inferior. It was not without an effort that I lifted my hat, and said, timidly, that I had carried the kitten in safe ty to its home. She thanked me her voice was low- toned and ma picsl, and the dim, soft, light of her eyes shone on me while she spoke. She was so kind and gentle in her manner that in a moment or two 1 found nmelf talking freely and without effort and I turned and we walked on together. We paced the length of the pier and back again slowly, and perhaps for the space of an hour, but to me it was the shortest hour I had ever spent And yet we had spoken only of things indifferent We had, soon discovered, a common interest in the sea and sky. She loved them both, she said, but only in their quiet moods. Happily the day was one of preternatural softness ; the waters scarcely trembled as they lay outspread beneath us, and the azure sky was flecked with cloudlets wo ven of gossamer. I asked whether she intended to remain in South beach, and she answered with some reserve that she had visited it under medical advice, and did not know what would be the length of her stay. At any rate I was rejoiced to think that she would not leave im mediately. My interest in this pale, lovely 6tranger deepened daily. We met frequently, and it was a sweet pleas ure to me that she had quietly ac cepted me as a friend, and allowed me to share her walks on the narrow wooden path above the sea. We met nowhere else, though I knew the house on the cliff where she had taken rooms. I was not long in com ing to the decision that she was the most extraordinarily interesting creature I had ever seen. She had read widely, and had the rare gift of drawing upon her books in conver sation. My own reading had been to some extent on similar lines with hers ; we had both, for instance, dipped pretty deeply into theology ; and religion, and religious literature, as I discovered, had an intense fas cination for her ; chiefly,) however on the metaphysical and specula tive sides. Her affections were with the church of the Middle Ages, at the period of the dawn of Koman ism ; and she wandered and won dered often anaid the mazes of med iaeval mysticism. It was in this connection that she once disclosed her inner self to me more fully and yet how slightly ! than she had ever done before ; it was evening, the first evening that we had walked together, for she had always returned to the shore ith her maid at dusk. I had look ed for her all the afternoon, and was leaying the pier disappointed, when I saw her coming. The moon 44 with sad steps climbed the sky, and the multitu dinous stars she'd a quiet light upon the sea. The maid wa9 with her, but walk ing at a greater distance than usual in the rear. I had noticed from the first that the relation between the beautiful young mistress and her maid was neither e friendly nor an intimate one. The maid, I thought," had a stolid and sullen air, and seemed devoid of that regard for her mistress which I thought would have been a natural feeling in one who stood in the position of protectress to so tender and gentle a being. My fancy had created for the lonely visitant of the pier a history ot min gled pathos and mystery, but it rest ed on a basis unsuostanuai as air, for she had never spoken of herself except in phrases involuntary and remote. This evening, when we had reached the end of the pier and had stood for a while watching the lights flash upon the water from a vessel anchored in the distance, I noticed that she was paler than usual, and that her eyes, whose restless, wistful glance always affected me strangely, had an anxious and troubled look, also a certain indescribable some thing I had never seen in them be fore, I prevailed on her to sit, and we placed ourselves on a bench be neath the life-boat which, swinging in chains overhead, formed a sort of extempore roof. I wanted to speak to ner, out knew not how to begin. Presently, of her own will, she turned and said, qui etly : You have noticed something strange in me." I renlied. in a confused and hur ried way, that I had sometimes fear ed she carried some heavy trouble with her : that I had shrunk from peaking oi it; but that I longed, if it were possible, to be oi some ser yice to her. You are right" she said, sadly. in supposing that I had a trouble, and indeed, it is a heavy one ; but yoa cannot help me no !" she said with a gesture and accent almost despairing, when I made as though I would oner some neip or counsel. It is not possible. My life is as it eraldl is. I cannot help myself, and no one else can help me. Then her voice sank to a frightful whisper, and the fear in her eyes heightened, as she said : "Have .you not seen that I am watched?" I cast an angry look in the direc tion of the maid, who was pacing the pier at a little distance from us ; and my companion also glanced that way and whispered : "Yes, you have seen it ; I knew J'ou had. Everywhere and all day ong I am watched and followed. I cannot escape ; they have woven a web around me." She turned and was full of excite ment; a condition that contracted strongly and painfully with her usually quiet and gentle state. "But why ia it?" I asked, anxious ly, with a feeling of deeper concern than I dared to reveaL "Why are you watchod and followed ? Do not your friends know of this? Why are you here alone with a woman you fear?" A moment's passion gleamed in her eyes and expired ; and inexpres sible yearning took its place while she answered : "My friends ? you do not under stand: you cannot; how could you? I fear my friends more than I fear her. She belongs to them and acts for them ; it is my friends that are my enemies ! it is from them that I cannot escape. Shall I tell you whv it is that they are cruel to me. and what is the horrible burden of my life? but no; I cannot Who are you that I should talk to you in this way? What interest have you in me?" A terrible suspicion crossed mv mind, but vanished in an instant. She had become calm again, and spoke as one who weighed her word.- and told no more than she wag aware of, I begged, I implored her, that she would speak to me and make her confidant assuring her of my fidelity and ray earnest desire to serve her ; but she was silent, and when she spoke again it was with a shadow of coldness in her manner, and she thanked me ; but said that she had spoken more than she in tended, and made an exense, and begged that I would forget, lhe maid, wbo as I believed, had noticed her recent excitement came up, and saying that it was late and the air was growing chilly, suggested that her mistress should return. She rose at once and gave me her hand, saying that she would not trouble me to accompany them to tne snore, and seeing that it was her wish to be alone I bowed and she withdrew, followed by the maid. From that night 1 thought ol her 'V- a. mm-e man ever. jay, ner sweet, mournful face haunted my waking and my sleeping dreams, and the sad music of her voice echoed in my ear. To the interest ol her Deauiy ana her bearing was now added that of the mystery she had darkly hinted at mystery which remained a mys tery, for she never again reverted to it, and I forebore to trouble her with ques'ionings. but the feeling that had Deen growing in me since our friendship opened, sank deeper and acquired ever fresh strength. Interest had ong since passed into fascination ; fascination now passed into love. At this there was nothing to won der. Her dark and melancholy beauty, the inexplicably subtle charm of her mauner, the frequency of our meetings and the curiously fitting character of time and place these were circumstances I had nei ther power nor will resist And I grew to love her with the heat and passion ol youth, though conscious always of a something hovering about her which made it difficult for me to approach her in the char acter of lover. But one evening as we sat together . . . 1 " , A .1- on the steps leaaing aown to ine water I dared to speak to her as I had never spoken before. She heard me. bat with agitation in her looks ; and when I paused and drew a little closer to her she shrank back, and in a tone almost of horror she answered that what I had asked her was wholly impossible for her to grant Then her manner softened, and with tears in her eyes she bade me leave her and forget her. To me then it seemed that this was not less impossible, and I said so earnestly and pleadingly ; urging that if it might not be now it might be in the future, and imploring for eave only to hope. But she, gently and kindly inex orable, denied me again ; thru giv ing way utterly to tears and with a gesture of despair she begged of me to go and see her no more. Scarcely knowing what I did I reached out my arms toward her, and she, thinking apparently that I ment to clasp her theugh I my self know not even now whether that were really my intention moved from me, and would have fallen backward into the water had not caught and held her by the wrist In thesame instant we both obser ved a sudden and startling change that had come over the sky. It had been a sultry afternoon, but the op pressive calm of the past two hours had ceased, and tho wind, with an ominous sound of storm, was rising in the west The sun had set red and , .,, r l angry, aad an arui'ery oi neavy rlmids loaded the western sky and spread rapidly until the whole heavens were obscured, save where one broad 6treak of a dull yellow marked where the sun had lately sunk. The sea was of one metallic hue its surface was broken by the wind, and little sullen waves with glittering crests beat against the sides of the pier. The preparations for the storm alsrmed my companion thoroughly. She rose quickly and turning to me and beckoning to her maid, who came on the instant, said nervously, "Let us go at once; I am afraid of the storm." We were three-quarters of a mile from the shore, and the wind contin ued to raise, and the clouds changed from a leaden to an inky color. Certain winds brought with them a very full and heavy tide, and the waiters, which were then nearly at the flood, rose as we went until they WHOLE NO. 1723. were almost flush with the edge of the pier. A single flash of lightning parted the clouds and danced for an instant right over our heads, follow ed by a prolonged muttering of thunder, which burst then into a crashing peal. Tne arm that rested in mine trembled, and I saw that my companion was completely over come by nervous excitement Her eyes wandered with a troubled look over the now towing and swelling waves and her whole frame was vio lently wrought upon. The maid on one side and I upon the other held each an arm and I strove to set her at ease, but her fear increased with every step she took Suddenly. when we were distant not a hundred yards from the shore, a glittering mass of spray was dashed up through the open beams of the pier, a few feet in front of us. She scream ed, pointing at it with quivering finger, and could hardiy be persuad ed to go on. The foam sheet van ished in the instant of its appearing, but all her courage had gone from her; and turning to me she said piteously : "Do not delay : let U9 make haste; can you not hear the voices in the wind and see the faces in the sea? They are pursuing us oh! let us hasten, or we shall be taken. It was the very exaltation ot ter ror, and though she never ceased urging us to hasten we were scarcely able to bring her the few remaining steps to the shore. I went with her to the door of her house, and would haye gone in, so troubled and fearful was I for her; but the maid signified that her mis tress had better be alone, and almost repulsed me from the door. I pass ed a sleepless, miserable night ; and at the earliest possible hour the next morning, went to the house, and asked anxiously for her. The maid answered me, saying curtly, "That her mistress was unwell, and that the doctor was with her." I was turning away, heartsick, when some thing in the maid a expression ar rested my eye ; and I looked at her narrowly. "Tell me," I said, "who you .ire, and what it ia that is the matter with vour mistress ?"' She laughed a little cruel laugh, and answered: "I am her keeper!" Tinaley's Mnnazine. A Pei-Matestt Lover. A curious story is lom ot the ro mantic courtship of Mrs. Celia Thaxter, the poetess. Her early life was spent on the Isle of Shoals where she still goes for the Summer. Her father, deceased a few years ago, was known as the hermit of the Shoals. When quite a young man disappointment caused him to be come a recluse, and purchasing the Island of Appledore lrom Xjw Hamphire for some S2o0 he erected there a small cabin. The delightful location, quiet, fair scenery and pure air soon a;trac!ed the attention of some tourists, particularly invalids, and requests for board began to be received. Gradually the cabin was enlarged until it became a Summer hotel, though conducted in the most indifferent manner as to whether guests came or went. They were never sought after. When the daughter Celia reached the age of fifteen, a young lawyer, at the island for his health, fell in love with her. Duly and respectfully he reques ted her hand of her father, who irri tably ordered him off the island. Respecting the rights of proprietor ship the young man removed to an adjacent one. and, there erecting a little hut, mowed his intention of remaining until the daughter be came of age, when he would marry her. Recognizing, probably, the fellow's obstinacy and strong will, her father relented, stipulating only for a year's delay. That passing. they were married. She Took, the Dry One. "Single ladies," said the captain of an ocean steamer, "often cross the water under the special care of the captain of the ship. A very fas cinating young lady was placed un der my care, and three young gen tlemen fell desperately in love with her. They were all equally agreea ble, and the young lady was puz zled which to encourage. She ask ed my advice. 'Come on deck,' said I, 'the first day when it is perfectly calm the gentlemen will, of course all be near you. I will have a boat quietly lowered down ; then do vou jump over-board, and see which of the gentlemen will be first to jump after you'." A calm day pflon came ; the captain's suggestion was soon followed, and two of th lovers jumped at the snme time. Between the.n two tne hu'.y could not decide. Take the man that didn't jump," said the captain, "he's the most sensible fellow, and will make the best husband." And she did. Enthusiastic for Troth. "So you struck the man because he called you a liar ?" said the po lice judge. "Yes, sir." "From which I am to infer that you were not a liar ?" "Oh no ; I was a liar and am yet Iflhadnot been a liar I should have paid no attention to the fel low's remarks. Truth is so scarce, Judge, that when I hear it I can't keep down my enthusiasm." Ar kansas Traveler. News About Taw a. It is ihe current report about town that Kemp's Balsam for the Throat and Langs is making some remark able cures with people who are troubled with Coughs, Asthma, Bronchitis, and Consumption. C. N. Boyd, will give any person atrial bottle free of cost. It is guaran teed to relieve and cure. Price 50cts. and $1. My brother and myself were both . 1 . c i. i. cured 10 ail appearance, causit" and hay fever last July and August Up to this date, December 2S, 181, .A:tUn flan ri Q 3 fl IT FafttfirTl ff these troubles. .Ely's Cream Balm was the medicine used. Gabriel 1 Ferris, Spencer, N. Y. Muscular Chrtstlamlty. Peter Cartwricht wa inn nam- of a well known Methodist pioneer. ne was a son oi peregrinatmgpigeon, who flew oyer the hills and swamps upon his apostolic wiogs. He feared nothing, and was as strong as he was baave. At a certain camp meeting he got into trouble with a set of roughs who had tried to break up the services. Major L., who was a prominent citizen, though a great "sinreV ider titled himself with the roughs, and, flying into a desperate rage, said if ho thought Cartwright would fight him a duel he would challenge him. "Major," the preacher answered, "if you challenge me I will accept it" "Well, sir, I dare yoa to mortal combat" "All right, sir; I'll fight you. And, sir, according to the laws of honor I suppose it is my right to choose the weapons with which to fight" "Certainly," the Major replied. "Well then, we will step over here into this lot and get a couple of corn stalks. I think I can finish you with one." The Major waxed hotter. He cleached his fists and foaming with rage, saying : "If I thought I could whip you I would smite you in a minute." "Yes, yes, Major," the militant minister asserted ; "but thank God you can't whip me; only don't you attempt to strike me, for if you do, and the devil gets into me, I shall giye you the worst whipping you ever got in all yoir life." That end ed it. Another bully threatened to whin the Rev. Cartwright who answer?! "sir, I never like to live in dread. If you really intend to whip me, come and do it now." The bully continued his curses and threats, and the ministerjump ed off his horse, and going to him said, "Look here, you have to whip me as you threatened, or you will have to stop that cursing, or I will put you in "the river and bap tize yon in the name of the devil, for surely you belong to him." The bully repented, and after wards became one of the preacher's best friends. Poultry liaising la the Setttb. Batom Rouge, La.. July 1. For the last twelve years I have given much personal attention to poultry because in summer it is almost the only meat of which we make use ; therefore every spring I make a point of rearing 10) to 2W chickens, not for sale, but for ray own house, hold. I am always well pleased when most of my broods come off in March, as at that early time of the year there is less risk of vermin, and the young chickens also have time to feather before thegnate come. Last winter was so cold that it was a long time before the hens began to lay, which of course, retarded their ime of sitting; so up to April 1, 1 had only sixtv-two chick ens : but their healthfulness and rapid growth exceed anything I have ever had in former years. The universal custom here is to feed young chickens on cracked corn, moistened only with enough water to make it stick together. I thought I would try feeding two thirds oat meal and one-third cracked corn and this has produced the stardieut. healthiest chickens I ever had. My first brood hatched on February 14, and from that day to this I have not lost one bird, nor do I see a weakly one among them. I may men tion that mr hens are mostly of the Creole stock of the country, some what improved by selection, while the roosters ara pure Houdama. My poultry arrangements are very sim ple : all the year round the entire flock ranges in a pasture about an acre and a-half in extent. For the younger birds I have feeding coops made ot laths, nailed at distances wide enough for the chicks to run out and in ; the sleeping rooms for the little one3 are under a shed, and consist of a row of boxes, which are every day swept out and twice a week washed with wood-ashes and water. In this climate our fowla are only housed during the night Girls and Tight Lacing;. A girl who hus jnst returned fram London tells Clara Belle that, in the health exhibition there, one of the exhibitions to meant to depict the horror ot tight lacing. A waxen figure was subjected for the pur pose of divulging the secrets of the ladies' torture chamber, to a com pression to the girth which a wo man may with proper self-respect measure around the waist The sufferings of the dummy, inaudible, save for the creaking of the ma chinery, which in the forcible com pression of the waist might well be mistaken for groans, were quite ter rible iu their realism, but the female spectators laughed insteal of being instructed. The fact is that the old curmudgeons, who take corsets aa a text for sermons against us are left very far behind. Injuriously tight squeezing of the waist is rare, ndeed, nowadays. "The coming man and woman," says Dio Lewis will tie just as large at the waist as at any other part of the IxHiy." h:it an old tool I Did he ever see a Fiji ir-land woman? I have. She had never been compressed by so much as a calico wrapper and i-et her waist had a goodly taper to it. retty soon Iewi will be demand ing legs as big at the ankles as at tne canes. Ana when that same ness of outline 13 produced by big ness of ankle rather than smallness of calf, I hope he will be satisfied, for surely the owner won't Dr. Sophus Tromholt reports that the electrical forces which produce tb aurora bortaiis have very little energy in Iceland, according to his obseryations last winter at Reykja vik. For this reason, probably, he failed in an attempt to obtain an artifioial aurora with the apparatus with which Prof. Lemstrom attained that result. During the winter Dr. Tromholt had several opportunities of viewing the full naoom through the aurora borealis, but the only effect obseryed was that the light of the aurora completely disappeared within a radius of five orten degrees around the lunar disc Capital Cora tort. Washington, D. C Mrs. Mary K. Sheed, 1110 Maryland avenue, Washington D. C, 6tates, that for several years she had suffered terri bly with facial neuralgia, and could find no relief. In a recent attack which extended to the neck, shoul ders and back, the pain was intense. She resolved to try bt Jacobs Uil, the great pain-reliever. Rubbing the parts affected, three timea only, all pain vanished aa if by magic, and ha not returaed. I